You'll find my current blog at http://dbvt.com/blog. Many thanks to Scott Watermasysk for hosting my blog here at weblogs.asp.net, beginning back in 2003 when it was dotnetweblogs.com and running Scott's .Text application.

I haven't reported in on my weblogs.asp.net account for a few weeks, but this is a cool technology that is definitely post-worthy. Being a ScottW groupie, I wanted the opportunity to work with his latest 0.96 source, and DotLucene looks like a great application. So in deciding how to add searching to my 0.95 blog there was no other choice for me. There are details I'm still working through (scheduling and highlighting), but it works great. Search page at http://dbvt.com/blog/search.aspx. Post describing the implementation is located here.

I've been recently interested in tracking other people's blog posts where I may have left comments, or posts I simply wanted to track. After sitting on it a bit it seems obvious that a web monitoring application would fit the bill quite nicely. After some investigation into both web- and client-based options, I went with WebMon (a freeware application) and it seems to work great in receiving notification of new blog post comments. More info and screenshot pics on a personal blog post here.

I had a piece of code in a usercontrol today which could have been the child of either a web page or another usercontrol. If I've referred to a usercontrol type with reflection before I've forgotten it, so today's reflection tidbit seemed like the first time, and first time events get a blog plug.

I discovered a quick tip on fixing the wraparound in the checkboxlist control short of overriding the ListControl object and altering the rendering of the base control: I wrapped the text of each checkbox item inside a TableCell TD. Produces the bottom checkboxlist display and works in both IE and Firefox. Details in a personal blog post here.

My home office Exchange server crashed in September and while the server has been replaced, I really don't want to re-install Exchange on it unless I absolutely have to. So I implemented a real simple approach to test HTML-based email components without requiring Exchange or any type of email server. The result is that HTML emails are sent to web folder for viewing in IE rather than sent to Exchange for viewing in Outlook. I cover the details with the source code on a personal blog post here if you're interested.

The Big Red Fez is based on a simple yet effective analogy of a monkey (wearing a big red fez) being trained to jump into a vat of lime Jell-O, but to do so the monkey must be rewarded with a banana. If the search for that banana is not obvious, the monkey will lose interest and not complete the Jell-O jump. So to the monkey, its all about the banana.